Traveller question
Member
March 2026
How much does a budget 2-week Morocco trip cost?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Traveller question
Member
March 2026
How much does a budget 2-week Morocco trip cost?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.
Serenity Morocco Expert Team
Travel Designer · StaffTravel Designers
March 2026
A genuine budget 2-week Morocco trip costs about $1,100–$1,900 per person on the ground — roughly $40–$70 a day — using trains and grands taxis, guesthouses and basic riads, market food, and group desert tours. Flights are extra; the Sahara night is the one worthwhile splurge.
Morocco is one of the best-value countries I know for an independent traveller, and two weeks on a tight budget is completely realistic without feeling like a hardship posting. The trick is to travel like a local: the train network between Marrakech, Casablanca, Rabat, Fes, and Tangier is comfortable and cheap, grands taxis fill the gaps for a few dollars, and you only ever pay for private transport on the desert leg, where there is no train.
On the ground, a careful fortnight lands around $1,100–$1,900 per person — roughly $40–$70 a day. Accommodation is the foundation: clean budget riads and guesthouses run $20–$45 a night, and a dorm bed in a hostel is $10–$15. Food is where Morocco is genuinely generous — a tagine or a bowl of harira in a local diner is $3–$6, a sandwich from a grill stall a couple of dollars, and the markets are full of bread, olives, dates, and oranges for almost nothing.
The one place I always tell budget travellers to loosen the purse strings is the Sahara. A shared group desert tour from Marrakech or Fes is $90–$160 for two or three days including transport and a camp night — extraordinary value for what is often the trip's emotional peak. Skimping here to save $40 is a false economy; you will remember the dunes long after you have forgotten which hostel had the better shower.
My candid caveats: budget travel costs time and energy rather than money. You will queue, you will haggle, connections will occasionally fall through, and "free" walking tours expect a tip. Build a small buffer — $150–$200 — for the inevitable upgrades you decide you want once you are there: a nicer riad in Chefchaouen, a hammam, a private taxi when you are too tired to wait. Two weeks for under $2,000 a person on the ground is very doable; it just rewards flexibility over fussiness.
Helpful links
Serenity Morocco Expert Team — Travel Designers, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered March 2026.
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